Nothing can erase what happened between April and July 1994 in Rwanda, a genocide that left approximately one million dead, dividing the country in two and which only left rancor and suspicion, but it's possible to try to soften its effects on the memory. This is how Ingoma Nshya was born, a project where Odile Gakire Katese decided to unite Hutu and Tutsi women through the skin of a drum, creating the first female percussionist group in the country.
Nothing can erase what happened between April and July 1994 in Rwanda, a genocide that left approximately one million dead, dividing the country in two and which only left rancor and suspicion, but it's possible to try to soften its effects on the memory. This is how Ingoma Nshya was born, a project where Odile Gakire Katese decided to unite Hutu and Tutsi women through the skin of a drum, creating the first female percussionist group in the country.
Nothing can erase what happened between April and July 1994 in Rwanda, a genocide that left approximately one million dead, dividing the country in two and which only left rancor and suspicion, but it's possible to try to soften its effects on the memory. This is how Ingoma Nshya was born, a project where Odile Gakire Katese decided to unite Hutu and Tutsi women through the skin of a drum, creating the first female percussionist group in the country.